With the temperatures around here getting into the forties, folks were lined up yesterday to wash their cars.
I chose a convenience store with an automatic car wash, went in and bought a code for it at the register, and got in line with my car to wait my turn. I knew the woman in the bright red Prius in front of me was going to be trouble when she had to open her door in order to reach the drive-up kiosk thing where you input your payment. Really, who buys a bright red Prius?
It says bad things about either your judgement or your driving skill if you are unable to place your vehicle within arm's reach of your objective while creeping along at a walking pace. Then she tried to feed some kind of pre-printed certificate into the bill-feed on the machine. Which was returned. Over and over again. Finally, she switched to actual paper money. Wrinkled bills that not even the most charitable person could call flat. Which were rejected by the bill-feed, unsurprisingly. She had gotten one dollar to be taken by the time that the car in front of her was being dried. At which point she abandoned her Prius to walk around to the front of the building and complain that the machine "wasn't working"! After the six cars that she just waited behind had no trouble using it? Riiiiiight.
I am afraid that I wasn't feeling either charitable or patient, so I felt the need to get out if my car and point out to her that the car wash was, in fact, empty and we were all waiting on her, so I got to hear her excuses. The guy from the next car took the rather more productive tack of just taking her money and Doing It For Her. Which went flawlessly.
None of which stopped her from pulling aside after her car was washed in order to drag the store clerk over to stand with her as she stared mystified at my car rolling out from under the blowers and the next car receiving its underbody flush from the supposedly malfunctioning machine.
Why do I suspect that the phrase "This happens to me all the time" was used? And that she has similar troubles with any machine more complex than a toaster?
Bill readers are stupid; mostly they just measure how long the piece of paper is. Mostly. If the end is folded over, that changes his long it is, and it won't work. How does anyone in this day and age not understand that?
I chose a convenience store with an automatic car wash, went in and bought a code for it at the register, and got in line with my car to wait my turn. I knew the woman in the bright red Prius in front of me was going to be trouble when she had to open her door in order to reach the drive-up kiosk thing where you input your payment. Really, who buys a bright red Prius?

I am afraid that I wasn't feeling either charitable or patient, so I felt the need to get out if my car and point out to her that the car wash was, in fact, empty and we were all waiting on her, so I got to hear her excuses. The guy from the next car took the rather more productive tack of just taking her money and Doing It For Her. Which went flawlessly.
None of which stopped her from pulling aside after her car was washed in order to drag the store clerk over to stand with her as she stared mystified at my car rolling out from under the blowers and the next car receiving its underbody flush from the supposedly malfunctioning machine.
Why do I suspect that the phrase "This happens to me all the time" was used? And that she has similar troubles with any machine more complex than a toaster?
Bill readers are stupid; mostly they just measure how long the piece of paper is. Mostly. If the end is folded over, that changes his long it is, and it won't work. How does anyone in this day and age not understand that?
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